Bloomberg Businessweek Europe - 05.08.2019

(Steven Felgate) #1
◼ BUSINESS Bloomberg Businessweek August 5, 2019

16


● By acquiring Avon, Brazil’s Natura plans to turn
its army of direct salespeople into online influencers

Selling the Rainforest


Door-to-Door


THE BOTTOM LINE Victoria’s Secret long prospered by
promoting its sexy lingerie. But changing norms about women
and beauty could put that growth at risk.

may be a result of the 2016 departure of Victoria’s
Secret’s longtime CEO, Sharen Jester Turney, who’d
guided the brand for a decade while managing to
convince many consumers that its celebration of
the feminine body was a form of female empow-
erment. Turney left because she didn’t agree with
the direction Wexner wanted to take the business,
according to a person familiar with their conver-
sations. “With her gone, the men really just took
over,” says one former executive. “And these were
men who had one ideal of women, and it’s not
based in reality.”
Jan Singer, who replaced Turney, left last year
soon after Razek made comments some plus-size
models and the transgender community found
demeaning. Singer was replaced by a man, leaving
L Brands with only two women among the 10 listed
executive officers and brand leaders. At the urging of
activist investor Barington Capital Group, L Brands
this spring added two more women to its board.
The failure to embrace changing norms about
women and beauty may already be having an
impact on Victoria’s Secret’s results. After rising
steadily since 2010, sales fell to $7.4 billion in fis-
cal 2017—the first drop in seven years—and edged
slightly lower again last year. Sales at stores open
for more than 12 months, a closely watched met-
ric in retailing, also slipped in 2018, with operating
income at the unit tumbling 45%, to $512.4 million.
Those poor results have led L Brands to tighten
its purse strings, resulting in the shuttering of
dozens of underperforming locations. L Brands
announced in February plans to close about 53
Victoria’s Secrets in North America this year, more
than three times the 15 it’s historically closed in an
average year. “Given the decline in performance at
Victoria’s Secret, we have substantially pulled back
on capital investment in that business,” L Brands
executives said in prepared commentary in May
after reporting a further 5% drop in same-store
sales in 2019’s first quarter.
Another notable change: In May, Victoria’s
Secret pulled its fashion show from network tele-
vision after 23 years. Ratings bottomed out in 2018,
with only 3.3 million viewers, down from the pre-
vious all-time low of 5 million the year prior. The
annual show is expected to move to streaming.
There may be limits to just how much Victoria’s
Secret can change its messaging. American Eagle
Outfitters Inc.’s rival Aerie line has found a base of
passionate customers who are younger and more
diverse and are calling for brands to have body-
inclusive messages. That’s helped Aerie log 18 con-
secutive quarters of double-digit same-store sales.
One advantage is that Aerie doesn’t have 40 years

of branding to overcome. “There’s been very
interesting growth in consumers embracing this
more holistic body-image view, but it’s probably too
far of a step away from what the DNA of Victoria’s
Secret is,” says Alex Arnold, a managing direc-
tor of the consumer practice at investment bank
Odeon Capital Group LLC. “It would be a whole-
sale repositioning of the company.”�Kim Bhasin,
Jordyn Holman, Sophie Alexander, and Anders Melin

On a pleasant Tuesday in May, dozens of beauty
influencers gathered at the New York Botanical
Garden in the Bronx for a vegan lunch and a panel
on sustainability in cosmetics. As they sipped pas-
sion fruit caipirinhas, the young women snapped
photos of lotions and soaps featuring exotic ingre-
dients such as murumuru and priprioca.
They’re the types of products that made host
Natura Cosmeticos SA a beauty giant in Brazil—
and that the 50-year-old company wants to bring
to the rest of the world. With its agreement in May
to buy Avon Products Inc., Natura is accelerating its
global ambitions and betting its brand of natural,
ethically sourced cosmetics will appeal to millen-
nial and Generation Z consumers who increasingly
want sustainable goods.
The company wants to attract social media
enthusiasts such as Ava Lee, a New Yorker who was
at the Bronx event. “I love that all Natura Brasil
products are clean and sustainable,” says Lee—
@glowwithava on Instagram—who often posts pho-
tos of cosmetics for her almost 24,000 followers.
“It’s hard to come by products that smell this good
and at the same time are very gentle on the skin
and don’t cause irritations.”
Natura’s $2 billion purchase of Avon—the very
company it had long emulated with its door-to-
door direct-selling model—will make it the world’s
fourth-biggest cosmetics company and among the
largest focused on natural products. About 80%

“In other
markets,
you see the
movement of
beauty going
into wellness.
In Brazil it
started the
other way
around”
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